- RA-4
A type of professional printer capable of printing digital files on traditional photographic paper. RA-4 printers use a series of colored lights to expose the paper, which blends the colors together to produce continuoustone prints. - RAID
Acronym for redundant array of independent disks. A RAID array can provide a photographer with large image libraries with many gigabytes of high-performance data storage. - RAM
Abbreviation for random-access memory. A computer's memory capacity, measured in megabytes (MB), determines the amount of data the computer can process and temporarily store at any moment. - rangefinder
Refers to an apparatus found on many cameras used to help focus the image. See also camera, viewfinder. - raster image processor (RIP)
A specialized printer driver that replaces the driver that comes with a printer. It takes input from applications and converts, or rasterizes, the information into data that the printer understands so that it can put dots on a page. Software RIPs typically offer features not found in standard printer drivers. - ratings
Part of the standard set of metadata in Aperture, which can apply 1 to 5 stars to an image. The image identified as the best shot in the sequence, the "pick," tops a stack. It's the only image visible until the stack is opened again. - RAW
The original bit-for-bit uncompressed digital image file captured by a camera. Aperture works with RAW images through every step of the digital workflow and supports the RAW formats from all leading digital camera manufacturers. - red-eye
The phenomenon of glowing red eyes in photographs. In Aperture, the Red Eye tool eliminates the effect. - reject
In Aperture, a negative rating applied to an image as part of the photo editing process. See also photo editing, ratings, select. - relative colorimetric
A rendering intent suitable for photographic images. It compares the highlight of the source color space to that of the destination color space and shifts out-of-gamut colors to the closest reproducible color in the destination color space. - rendering intent
The method by which colors that are out of gamut for a selected output device are mapped to that device's reproducible gamut. - resolution
The amount of information a digital image is capable of conveying. Resolution is determined by a combination of file size (number of pixels), bit-depth (pixel depth), and dpi (dots per inch). - RGB
Abbreviation for red, green, and blue. A color space commonly used on computers in which each color is described by the strength of its red, green, and blue components. The RGB color space has a very large gamut, meaning it can reproduce a very wide range of colors. This range is typically larger than can be reproduced by printers. See also additive color. |